Our answer is: it depends on the part function, acceptance requirement, and commercial scope, not only on the keyword. For 3d printing post processing service, we first check whether the buyer needs a raw printed part, a machined and finished component, or a qualified production item with records.
If the RFQ includes CAD, drawing, material, quantity, finish, lead time, and inspection expectations, Neway can usually give a sharper answer. If those details are missing, we can still review the concept, but the quote must carry assumptions that may change price or schedule.
Our team does not treat Surface Treatment as a default answer. We compare it with adjacent routes, including Surface Treatment and hot isostatic pressing hip, because the lower-risk path can change when the part gets larger, thinner, hotter, more cosmetic, or more tightly toleranced.
The best RFQs do not try to specify every manufacturing detail. They define the part function and acceptance requirement. Our engineering team can then recommend whether heat treatment, machining stock, heat treatment, HIP, surface finishing, or inspection records should be part of the quote. That is usually faster than forcing a process that does not fit the part.
For production-minded buyers, the quote should show how Neway will protect the approved geometry after the first build. We look for drawing revision control, repeat order notes, inspection frequency, material traceability, and the point where engineering questions must be closed.
In our review, 3d printing post processing service is not a standalone buying category. It is a request that has to survive build orientation, support removal, material behavior, and final acceptance. If the part has a sealing surface, threaded feature, thin rib, enclosed channel, or cosmetic face, we mark that feature first and then decide whether Surface Treatment should carry the main work or whether secondary operations must be quoted from the beginning.
A concise RFQ is better than a long but vague one. We prefer a short file package that states the application, critical dimensions, material standard, annual or batch demand, surface requirement, and what records the buyer needs with the shipment.
Cost review is also an engineering review. Powder use, machine time, support volume, heat treatment, HIP, CNC machining, surface treatment, and inspection are not separate surprises; they are part of the same manufacturing scope. When a buyer asks for what a finished am part quote should include, our team checks whether surface treatment or another downstream step will dominate the final price more than the printing operation itself.
The point is not to make the buyer become a printing expert. The point is to let our engineering team separate real requirements from habits copied from machining drawings. That often opens a better route, especially when weight, heat, conductivity, corrosion, or low-volume production is the reason for additive manufacturing.
Supplier comparison should be based on equal scope. If one supplier quotes only printing and another includes thermal barrier coatings tbc, dimensional inspection, packaging, and material records, the lower unit price may not be the lower project cost. We recommend asking each supplier to identify excluded work, assumed tolerances, and the point where a drawing change would trigger re-pricing.
Buyer input | What Neway checks | Why it affects the quote |
|---|---|---|
CAD and drawing | revision, units, datums, critical features | prevents wrong assumptions before pricing |
Material request | grade, substitute limits, certification need | changes alloy availability and lead time |
Geometry risk | thin walls, supports, enclosed channels, stock | drives process route and finishing effort |
Post-processing | heat treatment, HIP, CNC, EDM, surface finish | separates raw print cost from finished-part cost |
Acceptance | inspection method, report type, sampling level | defines what evidence ships with the order |
Before we treat the inquiry as quote-ready, we would confirm four commercial points: define whether material certificates or inspection reports are required; separate cosmetic surfaces from functional surfaces; tell us whether this is prototype, bridge production, or repeat demand; identify any customer standard that controls acceptance. These are not extra paperwork. They decide whether the price covers the real order or only a partial manufacturing step.
For what a finished am part quote should include, the buyer should also ask what would change the quoted price. A tighter tolerance, certified material, faster delivery, added HIP, extra inspection, or cosmetic finishing may be reasonable, but it should be visible. If those items stay hidden, the quote may look attractive while the project risk is simply postponed.
When buyers ask this question, we recommend sending the part files before locking the manufacturing route. Our engineering team can then flag printability, post-processing, inspection, and cost drivers before the order becomes difficult to change.